This commit does the following changes:
- [wallet] Remove 'account' argument from GetLegacyBalance()
- GetLegacyBalance() is never called with an account argument.
Remove the argument and helper functions.
- [wallet] Remove CWallet::ListAccountCreditDebit()
- Function no longer used.
- [wallet] Remove AccountMove()
- Function no longer used.
- [wallet] Remove AddAccountingEntry()
- Function no longer used.
- [wallet] Remove GetAccountCreditDebit()
- Function no longer used.
- [wallet] Don't rewrite accounting entries when reordering wallet transactions.
- Accounting entries are deprecated. Don't rewrite them to the wallet
database when re-ordering transactions.
- [wallet] Remove WriteAccountingEntry()
- Function no longer used.
- [wallet] Don't read acentry key-values from wallet on load.
- [wallet] Remove ListAccountCreditDebit()
- Function no longer used.
- [wallet] Remove CAccountingEntry class
- No longer used
- [wallet] Remove GetLabelDestination
- Function no longer used.
- [wallet] Delete unused account functions
- ReadAccount
- WriteAccount
- EraseAccount
- DeleteLabel
- [wallet] Remove fromAccount argument from CommitTransaction()
- [wallet] Remove strFromAccount.
- No longer used.
- [wallet] Remove strSentAccount from GetAmounts().
- No longer used.
- [wallet] Update zapwallettxes comment to remove accounts.
- [wallet] Remove CAccount
- No longer used
- [docs] fix typo in release notes for PR 14023
Internal c++ interfaces
The following interfaces are defined here:
-
Chain— used by wallet to access blockchain and mempool state. Added in #10973. -
Chain::Client— used by node to start & stopChainclients. Added in #10973. -
Node— used by GUI to start & stop bitcoin node. Added in #10244. -
Handler— returned byhandleEventmethods on interfaces above and used to manage lifetimes of event handlers. -
Init— used by multiprocess code to access interfaces above on startup. Added in #10102.
The interfaces above define boundaries between major components of bitcoin code (node, wallet, and gui), making it possible for them to run in different processes, and be tested, developed, and understood independently. These interfaces are not currently designed to be stable or to be used externally.